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词汇 terminology
释义

Definition of terminology in English:

terminology

nounPlural terminologies ˌtəːmɪˈnɒlədʒiˌtərməˈnɑlədʒi
mass noun
  • The body of terms used with a particular technical application in a subject of study, profession, etc.

    术语

    the terminology of semiotics

    符号学术语。

    count noun specialized terminologies for higher education

    高等教育的专门术语。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Students were required to perform individual self study of medical terminology.
    • Consumers may well be confused by the technical terminology surrounding lighting.
    • So for all you ladies out there with a need to know, here are some of football's general terminologies explained.
    • This development is still continuing daily, as new cases are decided with different terminologies being used by counsel and the judiciary.
    • Such changes in medical terminology often reflect new cultural attitudes.
    • I realise that the army's history and terminology is an unknown jungle to many.
    • Tea terminology is a matter of concern to tea drinkers and also to cooks who are using tea as a flavouring.
    • We need a distributed way, he said, to provide organizing terms and terminologies and deploy them on the Web.
    • Many aspects of museum Web sites require visitors to understand the specialized terminologies and controlled vocabularies used by museum professionals.
    • As in many other areas, both of social science and of popular discourse, there are competing terminologies and conceptual schemes in terms of which diversity and difference are described and explained.
    • I'd like journalists to be as creative as songwriters and come up with some new terminology.
    • Classifying business models based on these viewpoints creates confusion because the interests of individual observers vary and so do the terminologies they use.
    • This new terminology did not, however, replace the old terms of female and male sex hormones.
    • The two subjects have developed such completely different disciplines and terminologies that it is hard to think of them together.
    • So far, attempts to create universal terminology standards or automate the translation between different terminologies have met with limited success, Kaufman says.
    • So I can illustrate those mindsets by using more familiar western terminologies and that sort of thing.
    • Many new terminologies have evolved in recent times related to the reportage of HIV / AIDS, which are neutral, non-judgemental and positive.
    • Because our inability to make head or tail of complex financial terminology may be hitting us where it hurts most - in our pockets.
    • Priests, teachers, doctors, politicians have their own library of phrases and terminologies that seem designed to obfuscate rather than to clarify and it's all part of a spin to deflect from the evidence.
    • Words and terminologies that were once accepted or unquestioned are now being changed in all languages because over a period of time these words have lost their original meaning and acquired negative connotations.
    Synonyms
    phraseology, terms, expressions, words, language, parlance, vocabulary, nomenclature
    usage, idiom, choice of words
    jargon, cant, argot, patter, patois
    French façon de parler
    informal lingo, geekspeak, -speak, vernacular
    rare idiolect

Derivatives

  • terminological

  • adjective ˌtəːmɪnəˈlɒdʒɪk(ə)lˌtərmənəˈlɑdʒək(ə)l
    • The current debate has sometimes gone beyond terminological quibbles.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • When Tom isn't trying to change the subject through ad hominem or terminological arguments, he's often making a wordy confession of his political tendencies or saying things that are just plain wrong.
      • Amid all this terminological disputation, it is important, though not always easy, to keep in mind the real-world consequences of these ideas.
      • My argument is a terminological one, not in order to have tidy semantics, but because words can govern other behaviors.
      • Of course, in this case there is some reality behind the terminological change.
  • terminologically

  • adverb təːmɪnəˈlɒdʒɪk(ə)liˌtərmənəˈlɑdʒək(ə)li
    • We figure the last one is terminologically OK, but ominous.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The point is that the holders of the opposite position have nowhere to go terminologically.
      • This survey of the parties' functions indicates the need to be terminologically precise in discussing their strengths and weaknesses.
  • terminologist

  • nountəːmɪˈnɒlədʒɪstˌtərməˈnɑlədʒəst
    • In other words, you need to standardize your IT terminology, and you hire terminologists to do that for you.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The tasks of terminologists vary from updating single term records to projects on certain subject fields.
      • The terminologist drafts definitions and recommends the adoption of new terms for standardization purposes.
      • Recommendations on terms to be used in a given context remain the domain of the terminologist.

Origin

Early 19th century: from German Terminologie, from medieval Latin terminus 'term'.

Definition of terminology in US English:

terminology

nounˌtərməˈnäləjēˌtərməˈnɑlədʒi
  • The body of terms used with a particular technical application in a subject of study, profession, etc.

    术语

    the terminology of semiotics

    符号学术语。

    specialized terminologies for higher education

    高等教育的专门术语。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Words and terminologies that were once accepted or unquestioned are now being changed in all languages because over a period of time these words have lost their original meaning and acquired negative connotations.
    • I realise that the army's history and terminology is an unknown jungle to many.
    • Priests, teachers, doctors, politicians have their own library of phrases and terminologies that seem designed to obfuscate rather than to clarify and it's all part of a spin to deflect from the evidence.
    • I'd like journalists to be as creative as songwriters and come up with some new terminology.
    • Consumers may well be confused by the technical terminology surrounding lighting.
    • So far, attempts to create universal terminology standards or automate the translation between different terminologies have met with limited success, Kaufman says.
    • Classifying business models based on these viewpoints creates confusion because the interests of individual observers vary and so do the terminologies they use.
    • Students were required to perform individual self study of medical terminology.
    • So I can illustrate those mindsets by using more familiar western terminologies and that sort of thing.
    • The two subjects have developed such completely different disciplines and terminologies that it is hard to think of them together.
    • Because our inability to make head or tail of complex financial terminology may be hitting us where it hurts most - in our pockets.
    • Many aspects of museum Web sites require visitors to understand the specialized terminologies and controlled vocabularies used by museum professionals.
    • This new terminology did not, however, replace the old terms of female and male sex hormones.
    • Tea terminology is a matter of concern to tea drinkers and also to cooks who are using tea as a flavouring.
    • As in many other areas, both of social science and of popular discourse, there are competing terminologies and conceptual schemes in terms of which diversity and difference are described and explained.
    • Such changes in medical terminology often reflect new cultural attitudes.
    • Many new terminologies have evolved in recent times related to the reportage of HIV / AIDS, which are neutral, non-judgemental and positive.
    • This development is still continuing daily, as new cases are decided with different terminologies being used by counsel and the judiciary.
    • So for all you ladies out there with a need to know, here are some of football's general terminologies explained.
    • We need a distributed way, he said, to provide organizing terms and terminologies and deploy them on the Web.
    Synonyms
    phraseology, terms, expressions, words, language, parlance, vocabulary, nomenclature

Origin

Early 19th century: from German Terminologie, from medieval Latin terminus ‘term’.

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